The Car Tried to Get Around the Gate. Then: 'Boom! Boom!'

2 are dead in Aventura, Fla., after commuter train hits their car trying to cross tracks
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Dec 31, 2021 10:30 AM CST
The Car Tried to Get Around the Gate. Then: 'Boom! Boom!'
Stock photo.   (Getty Images/peterjquinn)

Two people in Aventura, Fla., died when a higher-speed commuter train hit their car as the driver tried to make it around the crossing gate, police said. The crossing gate's lights were flashing and bells were ringing to signal an approaching train on Thursday morning when the car tried to make it through, police and Brightline train officials said. The blue Toyota was left mangled on the other side of the street after the crash. Officials said no one on the train was injured, per the AP. "This was a tragic event and the direct result of an individual driving around the gates which were down, flashing and bells ringing, signaling an approaching train," Brightline said in a statement.

Caesar Tavares, who lives nearby in Aventura, told WSVN he heard the crash. "I knew right away the train hit somebody because it was real loud," he said. "The car was rolling. Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom! Then all of a sudden it stopped." Tavares told the TV station that he frequently sees people trying to get around the gates. "The train comes here every 15 minutes and people are always stopping on the tracks," he said. "I knew it was bound to happen." The trains had only recently started running again after being shut down at the start of the coronavirus pandemic in March 2020.

A man who was walking on the tracks in North Miami Beach died when he was struck by a Brightline train earlier this month. It was at least the 49th death involving a Brightline train since the Miami-to-West Palm Beach line launched in mid-2017. An AP examination of federal records shows that Brightline has more fatalities per mile than any US railroad, one about every 31,000 miles. Since 2018, an average of about 1,200 people are fatally struck by trains annually in the US.

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None of the deaths involving Brightline have been blamed on its equipment or crews. Investigations showed most victims were either suicidal, intoxicated, mentally ill, or had gone around barriers at an intersection in an attempt to beat the trains, which travel up to 79mph through densely populated areas. A pedestrian was killed by a commuter rail train in downtown Orlando on Thursday. Police were investigating the cause of that crash, news outlets reported.

(More train crash stories.)

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